BOOKS & ELETRONIC MEDIA
Traditional, complementary and alternative medicine: policy and public health perspectives
Charlie Changli Xue1
Agence d'évaluation des technologies et des modes d'intervention en santé, 2021 avenue Union, bureau 10.083, Montreal H3A 2S9, Canada
Editors: Gerard Bodeker and Gemma Burford,
Publisher: Imperial College Press, London, 2007
ISBN: 978-1-86094-616-5; hardcover; 472 pages; price £47
The seventeen chapters of this book deal with a wide range of issues on traditional medicine: policy (10 chapters), public health issues (5 chapters) and research (4 chapters). Each chapter has been authored by one or more international experts. In their introduction, the editors, Bodeker and Burford indicate that the book represents "a first attempt at generating a systematic global overview" of traditional medicine in the context of its increasing globalization.
Traditional medicine is an amorphous concept that comprises a range of long-standing and still evolving practices based on diverse beliefs and theories. Bodeker and Burford point out the dichotomous situation of particular forms of traditional medicine being practised in their countries of origin and also in countries to which they have been "imported". They suggest that the term "traditional, complementary and alternative medicine" (TCAM) is a more appropriate term to describe such traditional therapies globally.
Health care can broadly be divided into modern (conventional, orthodox, Western or allopathic) and traditional (indigenous, complementary, alternative or integrative). The former is clearly defined, with minor regional variations in its underlying philosophy and clinical methods. In modern medicine, knowledge expansion is achieved through scientific research, which can involve global collaboration and commitment. Such research is well supported financially by industry, governments and philanthropic organizations. This is in sharp contrast to the situation with TCAM.
The book argues that education is a critical means of ensuring safe and effective practice of TCAM. However, levels of education vary substantially from country to country, and in many countries, the current curricula may not be adequate enough to ensure that the potential benefits of various forms of TCAM therapies are fully realized. Different education needs should be met, such as specific public health education for HIV/AIDS. The gap in education provision is also attributed to "a lack of funding and/or political will".
The health benefits of TCAM have not so far been fully assessed in ways that can be universally accepted as being evidence based. This is partly due to the philosophical differences and cultural barriers between the countries where such therapies originated and the Western countries where they are now also being practised. Much of the research on TCAM is of questionable quality and often it does not use modern scientific techniques. The book proposes that a combined political and scientific approach will be necessary to provide for a comprehensive research agenda targeted at establishing the potential risks and benefits of TCAM. Only then will health-care professionals be in a position to make informed decisions about the use of TCAM therapies alongside those of conventional Western therapies.
With the effective leadership of WHO, a number of countries have developed traditional medicine policies; however, appropriate funding for traditional medicine research has generally not been forthcoming. It is argued in the book that the extent to which individual countries, particularly Western countries, have actually committed to supporting TCAM can be measured in terms of the funding that has been allocated to research and practice. Research efforts in Western countries have been largely concerned with the quality, safety and efficacy of only certain forms of TCAM, such as herbal medicine and acupuncture. Such a focus on herbal medicine may be due to the perceived higher level of risk associated with its practice and also because of its potential for exploitation in drug discovery. For some modalities of TCAM, there has been significant progress towards the development of an underpinning evidence base, for example, the research on Artemisia spp. for treatment of malaria.
Several of the contributors to the book maintain that there needs to be a better understanding of the reasons for the sudden rise in the popularity of TCAM in the developed world. They argue that in the growing use of "imported" traditional therapies, there has been a failure to properly acknowledge the traditions and practices of the communities where they originated. The intellectual property rights associated with the knowledge embodied in the TCAM therapies is another important issue that is discussed in some detail in the book. Moreover, practitioners, researchers and consumers in developed countries do not seem to appreciate the efforts and significant resources that are now being made available to "modernize" TCAM.
The impressive team of contributors to this book foreshadows its likely impact on the ongoing integration of the main forms of TCAM and modern medicine. The book provides an overview of the many and complex issues surrounding the expanding use of TCAM. It will be of value to government policy-makers, regulators, researchers and health-care practitioners.
1 Correspondence to Charlie Changli Xue (e-mail: Charlie.xue@rmit.edu.au)